The government is attempting to step in and stop superannuation funds from making poor investment decisions with your retirement savings. But support for the government’s “Your Future, Your Super” package is waning — Coalition MPs have criticised it as giving too much power to Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.
Instead the system should be democratised, with superannuation members empowered to vote on where their cash is invested and trustees held to account for poor decisions.
An attempt to silence ‘activism’
Non-profit industry super funds, which are jointly governed by union and business representatives, consistently outperform for-profit funds financially. But the Coalition, always keen to kneecap union-affiliated funds, is spinning the narrative that “activist” union-aligned trustees use their financial clout to “pursue political objectives at the expense of members’ interests”.
Frydenberg and his anti-industry fund acolytes have complained about ACTU president Michelle O’Neill’s call for union-aligned trustees to punish BHP for its industrial record, AustralianSuper and CBUS pushing Glencore to lower carbon emissions, HESTA pushing for gender parity from investees, and Industry Super Holdings’ support for news site The New Daily.
Thus the government proposes tightening the “sole purpose” test — from trustees making decisions “in members’ interests” to “in members’ financial interests”. Failing that, the legislation would give the treasurer draconian powers to bar funds from investing in things he deems against your interest (or, presumably, his).
Add to that a regulatory proposal restricting the actions of proxy advisers, who counsel institutional investors like super funds on matters such as whether to approve CEOs’ pay packets or penalise them for, say, rorting JobKeeper or heating the planet.
Yet far from political agendas being imposed on unwitting members by “woke” trustees or their advisers, it is more often members holding their fund managers’ feet to the fire, often with limited success, over the environmental and social returns on their savings. So by attacking non-financial benefits, the government is not protecting you from politically correct trustees. It is instead further limiting the scope of your financial power.
For instance, the superannuation sector has come under sustained pressure from members to reconsider its investments in fossil fuels. My fund, UniSuper, has made concessions to a member-led campaign, which I have signed on to, calling for it to phase out its investments in non-renewable sources of energy.
A recent court ruling found funds can be found negligent for not divesting from coal, given the coming collapse of fossil fuel companies, meaning the financial interests test would not fully curtail this activism. But given the extensive proposed powers for the treasurer, and the government’s willingness to use state power to prop up fossil fuels even against market sentiment, activist groups such as Market Forces are treating the Your Future, Your Super reforms with scepticism.
A democratised system
But what if such campaigners are merely a vocal minority drowning out “quiet Australians” who actually want their savings pissed away on white elephant gas projects? There is a sure-fire way to find out: ask them. Empower members to vote on contentious investment decisions and give them avenues to hold trustees accountable when they get it wrong.
Since Paul Keating opted for a privatised model for compulsory superannuation instead of creating a single public fund, a “principal-agent” problem arose whereby members often don’t know who to hold accountable for investment decisions and how. Most funds’ boards are unelected and there are few formal avenues to influence their decisions.
The Morrison government partially addressed this last year when it required funds to hold annual member meetings. But members can only ask questions, not vote on binding motions or sack trustees so the meetings are often just hollow talk shops. If the Coalition was genuinely committed to empowering members to hold trustees to account, instead of merely throwing another hurdle in front of activist groups, it would seek to further democratise funds.
This is perhaps the Coalition’s greater fear regarding superannuation — that despite its best efforts to turn it into a tax-evasion vehicle for the wealthy, union involvement would precipitate the system’s evolution into something more radically democratic and egalitarian than Keating’s original vision, something like Sweden’s Meidner funds.
Economist Richard Denniss has noted the irony and opportunity represented by some of Australia’s biggest companies being partly owned by workers’ latent assets, a kind of quasi-socialisation of capital.
Imagine how our economy might look if workers were given a greater say in how their enormous collective wealth was invested. It could be used — as Labor has threatened should Frydenberg’s new powers pass — to force funds to divest from firms that steal their workers’ wages or to enforce any number of progressive standards.
Workers are increasingly realising the power their super affords them and demanding their collective wealth be used not just to finance their retirement, but to reshape Australian capitalism. If Frydenberg truly cared about empowering members, he’d put your future and your super in your hands.
Do you want your super to be in your hands? Write to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say section
“The government is attempting to step in and stop superannuation funds from making poor investment decisions with your retirement savings.”
And yet the government is prepared to build a gas-fired power plant, when no commercial institution would go anywhere near it. I’m not sure the federal government is best placed to be making investment decisions on my behalf.
When was the last time they made an investment decision that turned out to be sound in any way?
Cut-price NBN?
French submarines?
Inland railway?
Anyone?
F35s.
Not much news about those lemons lately. I think even the US Airforce has ditched them.
So the actual plots won’t have to.
That’s PILOTS I assume…and yes…even the makers of the blasted things (The Americans) have ditched the planes…before we even got them delivered!!
Yes The Joint Strife Fighter as it is known!
US officials reveal there aren’t enough spare parts for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter
US officials have warned there is a chronic shortage of spare parts for international buyers of the Joint Strike Fighter.
Hence…F-35As are not mission-capable 48 per cent of the time
The network to distribute spare parts for the F-35 to international partners has not been established
US official says the fighters “probably won’t” meet a September benchmark for capability
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-25/there-arent-enough-spare-parts-for-the-joint-strike-fighter/11337686
Those JP4 guzzling turbine powered Abrams Tanks, built to race across the generally cold and wet North German Plain against a Soviet invasion of Europe. Not so good in the dry and dusty outback of Australia.
This cynical exercise is akin to the endless, bogus voter recounts in US GOP states like Arkansas, alleging a fraud that did not happen, allowing a smokescreen to enact fraudulent voter suppression laws.
Where is the evidence that our big industry funds are poor investors? They’re not. Most averaging about 7% PA.
Where’s the evidence of poor governance? There isn’t any. Aside from the fact that the LNP is constantly, vexatiously over-regulating them to keep them on the back foot.
They sailed through the banking RC, unlike their commercial, LNP doning, competitors.
Which is the heart of it. Industry funds are superior to commercial funds for member outcomes, and everybody knows it.
But the LNP won’t have it. Wrecking it is one of their few consistent policy objectives.
What, a handful of union/worker reps on the board (matched employer/industry reps) An outrage! Some ex-Labor politicians getting board roles? Let’s cut that out!
Actually the idea of unions/workers being anywhere near a large pile of money disgusts them.
Because money is power. What happens whey they decide to divert from fossil fuel? To stop supporting industries that do not look after their workers?
And the trillion dollars locked up there in a not-for-profit!?! Think of all the fees going to waste!!
LNP and their commercial mates lost the super war badly.
So now, they will do and say anything to undermine and break up the whole system.
And’ like with their boondoggle $600m gas plat, they’re proposing Soviet-style central planning. The irony.
And the crime of the is, they offer and have no plan or vision to replace it – to solve Australia’s ageing and pension problem. Nothing.
Just partisan wrecking.
Surely Fraudberg (and Hume et al) is only doing this on behalf of the interests of his and the Coalition’s corporate sponsors?
A disingenuous “altruistic” ruse to distract attention from their real intent.
The sort of BS m.o. patter they’ve got down pat through years of practice…. but it’s so tatty and worn that more people are seeing through it, you don’t even have to look all that hard at it to see it for what it is.
Overused for years, by their predecessors, they’ll have to come up with some other form of deception : but of course they’re toooo lazy to do that sort of work.
“The government is attempting to step in and stop superannuation funds from making poor investment decisions with your retirement savings.”
In that case, Josh better set up a permanent office over at AMP – his mates there should be able to organise that for him. I take it he will be using the investment decisions/strategies of the consistently better performing industry funds as the reference template for how it should be done?
This lie that people should be able to manage their own money is such a distraction. All the Morrison government wants to do is force superannuation funds to invest in dud projects such as $600m white elephant of a gas plant. They want super to invest in coal mines. They have no concern that peoples hard earned will be lost and people will have to live in poverty in their old age. A despicable government.